Act Like Your Price Just Doubled
What if tomorrow I forced you to double your price?
If you sell software, your prices just doubled. If you’re an hourly consultant, your rate just doubled. If you’re a salaried employee, you’re now demanding double your salary.
Ignoring the (understandable) backlash from your existing customers/employer, what would you have to do to justify the new price tag?

- If you’re selling software, would it be best to add new features, or would people perceive more value if it were beautifully designed? Does it need more functionality or fewer bugs? If a customer emails tech support, what response would impress the customer? If a customer comes to you with twenty feature requests, do they get lost in the shuffle or do you proactively contact them quarterly with updates?
- If you’re a consultant, could you command a higher rate if you got certified in some technology, or would you earn more authority writing a quality blog? Should you charge for every email or provide some advice gratis? Should you charge a low rate but milk projects for extra hours or should you be expensive but brutally honest with your time reporting? To maintain contact with your past customers, is it enough to send automated holiday e-cards or should you write a quarterly newsletter with useful tips and ideas?
- If you’re an employee, how could you make yourself indispensable? Is there a project lying around that no one else is taking the initiative on? Is there a way to save money? Is there something you could do above and beyond your job description that would undeniably improve the company?
- If you’re looking for work, should your résumé list as many technologies as possible or should you boast about your deep expertise in one area? Should you dwell on formatting or on making an impression? Should you copy the ten recommendations you have on LinkedIn or is it best to attach one passionate, glowing recommendation? Is it more impressive to list your club memberships or your Stackoverflow reputation?
Assuming this thought experiment has provoked some ideas for how you’d change your approach to business or your professional behavior…
What would happen if you acted like that without raising your price?
You’d crush your competition. Maybe it’s the edge you need to make sales during a recession. Or maybe you could justify raising your price!
Hold on though, isn’t it more difficult, expensive, and time-consuming to behave as if your time is twice as valuable?
Yes.
But then, behaving that way does make you twice as valuable!
Jason Cohen wrote this post and allowed us to syndicate it. He is the founder of Smart Bear Software, maker of Code Collaborator, the world’s most popular tool for peer code review and recent winner of the Jolt Award.
Tags: pricing

March 11th, 2010 at 3:28 am
Nice Post!. I found this post on and I found what I was looking for. I’ve bookmarked this post for future reference
Nice article - Thanks